Number of refugees soars to record 65 million with 24 people displaced every minute

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has said that forced displacement of people, mostly from the conflict zones, has reached record levels. The agency claimed that as many as 65.3 million people were forced to either turn into refugees or asylum seekers or had to flee their homes in 2015.

In a new report titled Global Trends, UN estimates showed that one person from 113 was displaced during the 12-month period. This was a sharp increase by five million compared to the earlier year.

Most refugees hail from conflict zones in war-torn countries such as Afghanistan, Syria and Somalia. More than one-third of the 65.3 million people displaced were forced to flee their home countries while the rest managed to find a place elsewhere within their countries. This is the first time the numbers clocked the 60 million mark.

The report was released on World Refugee Day to highlight the unparalleled crisis toiling several continents. It also warned that 24 people, on average, were forcibly displaced from their homes every minute in 2015. This has been witnessed for the first time since the Second World War.

The international aid agency World Vision and the UN's children's charity Unicef have also warned the dangers many refugees face. Half of all displaced peoples, according to UN figures, are children and face social problems like child labour, trafficking, exploitation and child marriage.

"Politics is gravitating against asylum in some countries. The willingness of nations to work together not just for refugees but for the collective human interest is what's being tested today, and it's this spirit of unity that badly needs to prevail," said Filippo Grandi, chief of the UN arm.

The research said as many as 86% of the refugees are being taken care by low- and middle-income countries. "At sea, a frightening number of refugees and migrants are dying each year. On land, people fleeing war are finding their way blocked by closed borders," Grandi added.

A Syrian farmer named Hikmat, who now lives in a tent in Lebanon along with his family, said: "We're stuck here. We can't go on and we can't go back. My children need to go to school, they need a future."

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24 March 2016: Boys hold placards while stranded at the Greek-Macedonoan border, two days after a triple bomb attack in BrusselsAndrej Isakovic/AFP

24 March 2016: Boys hold placards while stranded at the Greek-Macedonoan border, two days after a triple bomb attack in BrusselsAndrej Isakovic/AFP24 March 2016: Two boys peer out from inside a tent marked with the slogan 'Open the Border' at a makeshift camp occupied by migrants and refugees near the village of IdomeniAndrej Isakovic/AFP20 March 2016: A child stands in a field near a makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian borderAndrej Isakovic/AFP10 March 2016: A man lights a bonfire in a makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border during the Balkan blockadeDimitar Dilkoff/AFP8 March 2016: A man burns a pair of trousers to make a bonfire on a foggy morning near the Greek village of Idomeni where thousands of refugees and migrants are strandedDimitar Dilkoff/AFP7 March 2016: A child stands among razor wire close to a gate at the Greek-Macedonian borderDimitar Dilkoff/AFP4 March 2006: Children walk through a field towards a makeshift camp near the Greek village of IdomeniLouisa Gouliamaki/AFP